“This is a hostile decision that affects first and foremost the decent citizens of Dublin, and also places a stain of shame on the city,” he added.

A Dublin city council subcommittee passed the motion to fly the Palestinian flag over City Hall for a month starting May 15, following a proposal by John Lyons of the far-left People Before Profit Alliance, in order to mark 50 years of Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

https://twitter.com/JudKVAV/status/848867818879815680

While it will still need to go before the full council on May 8 before the motion is passed, the current composition of the legislative body suggests that it is unlikely to face any hurdles.

The Dublin city council is largely populated with members of the Sinn Fein and other left-wing parties, which have traditionally been anti-Israel.

Referring to Israel as an “apartheid regime,” Lyons commended the decision of the subcommittee. “I think the gesture itself is a symbolic one, the flying of the flag. I think more and more people are of the opinion that the very state of Israel and how it’s behaving in an extreme manner is actually destabilizing its cause and argument,” he said.

Pro-Israel advocates have found a rather difficult environment in Ireland of late.

Then, the Foreign Ministry said that it was “horrified by the vicious action of a group of protesters, which denied the ambassador of Israel his right to freedom of expression at Trinity College last night.”

In its statement following the cancellation, Trinity College said it viewed the protesters’ actions “as an unacceptable attack on free speech.”

Earlier in February, Ambassador Boker reportedly informed Jerusalem of Dublin’s possible intentions to soon recognize Palestine as a state. An Israeli official was quoted in a report in the Haaretz Israeli daily at the time as saying an announcement from Dublin on Palestine recognition had already been possible, but Israel’s passage of a controversial law legalizing wildcat settlements made such a decision far more likely.

The Israeli official reportedly said Boker’s cable recommended a request for assistance from the Trump administration in Washington, as well as having Netanyahu call his Irish counterpart, Enda Kenny, in order to discourage Dublin from recognizing Palestinian statehood.

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